DiscoverWith Friends Like These
With Friends Like These
Claim Ownership

With Friends Like These

Author: Crooked Media

Subscribed: 22,206Played: 249,345
Share

Description

On this season of With Friends Like These, Forgiveness and Reconciliation, host Ana Marie Cox looks at post-Trump America and tries to find models for how we forgive people, and if we should.
240 Episodes
Reverse
Old 97’s band members and old time friends, Rhett Miller and Murray Hammond, join us for a conversation about songwriting, falling into friendship love and how a band is like an open marriage.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
The Sound of Nashville

The Sound of Nashville

2021-12-1058:46

Rising artist, Ciara Rae shares her experience of living in Nashville as a songwriter and musician. She tells us about the ups and downs of surviving in a forever evolving industry, staying true to her music and how songwriting helped her into recovery from an eating disorder.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
The Go-Go's made history as one of the most successful all-female bands ever. Bassist Kathy Valentine's new memoir puts their story in context and highlights her own rocky path to recovery, success, and serenity.. The author of ‘All I Ever Wanted’ joins us to talk songwriting, booze, and sex.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
The creator of Sans Bar, the bar without booze, Chris Marshall joins us for a conversation on recovery, community and how to make the perfect mocktail.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
This week is the 400th anniversary of what America knows as Thanksgiving. Join us as food historian Linda Civitello takes us through how the traditional meal has evolved through the decades and what items we love to indulge in owe their existence to indigenous people. We explore the good, the bad and ugly that comes along with this beloved holiday. From the food racism to legacy of the indigenous people and everything in between! For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
Emmy and James Beard Award-winning TV personality, chef, writer and teacher, Andrew Zimmern joins the show to talk about Food politics, the restaurant industry post pandemic, and his journey with sobriety.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
Writer for the Atlantic and Author of the book The Cruelty is the point: The Past, Present and Future of Trump’s America, Adam Serwer, joins the show to talk about Texas’ politics, the misconceptions about the state and how to create a better America using Texas as our teacher.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
Comedic writer and actress Daisy Haggard joins the show to talk about her work creating the Showtime series “Back To Life,” which follows an underdog female character who returns to her hometown after serving an 18 year prison sentence.Daisy talks about why she wanted to humanize people struggling for redemption, and what she learned about writing, forgiveness and herself. For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
Comedian Sophie Santos joins the show to talk about her memoir -- “The One You Want to Marry ---and Other Identities I've Had.”  It details Sophie’s life growing up as an Army brat in the South, while also being white, Hispanic, Asian, and gay - and the bumpy (and often hilarious) moments that led her to finding herself as an adult. For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
Reporter Eric Garcia's new book -- “We're Not Broken: Changing the Autism Conversation” -- springs from his experience as a political correspondent and autistic person. Frustrated with the myths and stereotypes about autism found in the media, he set out to report on what autism really looks like and to ask autistic people what they really want and need.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
Lizz Winstead is best known as the co-creator of The Daily Show, a program that reinvented late-night, and showed a new generation of comedians how to combine news with satire and activism. Her next act was founding Lady Parts Justice, now known as Abortion Access Front, an organization that travels the country, supporting abortion clinics and the people who work there.She sits down to offer some practical suggestions for what we all can do about the new Texas anti-abortion law, and what to look out for as other states try to pass similar legislation.To learn more about Abortion Access Front, go to aafront.orgFor a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
After enduring what she calls “700 bad days” in a row, author Kelly Williams Brown realized that simple rituals and crafty projects were often what got her through her most difficult days. In her new book “Easy Crafts for the Insane” she explains the practical, fun, and do-able activities that offer an escape from a chaotic world.Note: This week is National Suicide Prevention Week. This conversation offers a set guardrails to activate in moments of deep crisis. If you need to talk to someone right now, please call the national suicide prevention hotline at 800-273-8255 or try the Crisis Text Line, 741-741For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
For the past 10 years, actor, author and humorist John Hodgman has hosted the podcast “Judge John Hodgman” where he helps friends, roommates and romantic couples negotiate their long-standing quibbles: Things like: “Which one of us is loading the dishwasher right?” Throughout the years, John’s discovered some deeper throughlines about gender roles and power dynamics. He also talks about his animated show on FXX called “Dicktown” which is a surprising window into male sensitivity and forgiveness. For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
Best-selling author of "White Rage" Carol Anderson explores the anti-Black history of the Second Amendment. There is structural racism built into our Bill of Rights! The story of white Americans' fear of black Americans with guns starts with the enslaved people who fought against the British and runs all the way to the killing of legal gun owner Philando Castile - and beyond. Her new book is The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
Fellow Crookedian Rebecca Nagle joins us to talk about Season Two of “This Land.” From the “boarding schools” of the 19th century to the good intentions of the Indian Child Welfare Act — and the big money campaign to repeal it.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
The co-author of “Forget the Alamo: The Rise and Fall of an American Myth,” Bryan Burroughs, debunks the Anglo-centric fables surrounding Texas’ founding myth — with a cameo appearance from Phil Collins. (In the myth, not as a guest on the show.)For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
Brian Broome’s dad used to threaten to hit him so hard he’d go to heaven — “punch him up to the gods” — if he didn’t conform to the ideal of Black masculinity. Broome joins to discuss his memoir, “Punch Me Up to the Gods, and rising above that threat, finding himself, and finding recovery. Then on this week's Adorables segment, comedian (and fake judge) John Hodgman joins to tell us about his cat Lolo.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
Former young girl and memoirist Melissa Febos joins to discuss the pressures and paradoxes in how society treats female children. Her most recent book is called “Girlhood.” For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
This podcast is now a Simone Biles stan account. ESPN’s Alyssa Roenigk joins to talk about the Olympics as a problematic fave and Biles as an unproblematic one. Women’s gymnastics did a number on a lot of us as young people — the unrealistic body expectations, the idea of “tough love” as the best way to coach. That culture is changing and let’s celebrate that! On Adorables Like These, time to talk to the “sensitive one” in the Pod Save America boy band, Tommy Vietor, who tells us about his bath mat with a pulse, Lucca. (CW for gymnastics conversation: sexual abuse and eating disorders.).For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
Restorative justice advocate Ruby Welch brings the perspective of a previously incarcerated person to policy. She’s not a fan of how most people (even well-meaning people!) prioritize the needs of the recently released. Find out what it means to be really heard. On this week’s Adorables Like These: Sora, the grumpy-faced kitty companion of Crooked intern Mari Cardenas.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/withfriendslikethese.
loading
Comments (64)

Josh Friedman

Listening to this now makes me sad. We were so young and naive once.

Dec 2nd
Reply

BC

that was a poorly timed ad break

May 3rd
Reply

BC

That last closing comment about this being the first time a majority of people calling the rape abuse and incest national network being children chilled me to the bone

Mar 25th
Reply (1)

BillyBlazko

This conversation is awkward. The woman she is interviewing is hard to listen to.

Mar 20th
Reply

BC

I've never considered the mental and emotional toll it must take on the people who are maki g sure executions can happen, like the tie down team.

Mar 7th
Reply (1)

BC

I don't know if it's just because the episodes for this podcast are shorter than podcasts I usually listen to, but I feel like this podcast has more ads than others. I did the math on this episode, it was ~23.4% ads.

Feb 7th
Reply (2)

Stephanie Schlegel

Did Steve Schmidt actually call himself part of a Progressive Movement? is the Lincoln Project now considered progressive? I call bullshit #proleftpod

Sep 19th
Reply

BC

oh I love this man

Jul 13th
Reply

BC

I was just thinking about this earlier today

Mar 30th
Reply

Emmm Arrrrr

such a good episode. I so appreciated the kindness - and such a cerebral expression of kindness - both of you displayed.

Mar 1st
Reply

BC

I need to ask people "Why do you think that?" more often.

Feb 18th
Reply

BC

I never heard about the German women who demanded their Jewish husbands be returned to them. I think that their power as a group is something everyone should hear about. How incredibly moving.

Feb 7th
Reply

Michelena Wolf

This is exactly why Andrew Yang's campaign for President has me feeling so hopeful! His Freedom Dividend will allow people to stop dragging themselves through the slog of capitalism....while still engaging in capitalism, and benefitting from it! It's not changing the system, it's living WITHIN it, and making it work for us, instead of concentrating this country's wealth at the very top. I cannot understand why his campaign hasn't caught on with millennials yet! He really has planned for an excellent future for all Americans.

Jan 11th
Reply

g

something about the audio mixing makes all the s sounds peak really hard, even painfully, on cheap speakers

Dec 7th
Reply

Tatyana Noyb

No. They're not fundamentally decent people. They're fundamentally not good. Nobody questioned their morals and they aren't going to do it themselves. Being complicit is not a synonym of good. Question the silence.

Nov 4th
Reply (1)

g

I volunteered for Bill Nelson's recount effort, I'm so sad that Gillum lost to Desantis :( liked Gillum as mayor when I lived in Tallahassee, glad to hear updates from him

Oct 12th
Reply

g

Our public libraries and parks present a great opportunity to create vibrant community spaces. I wonder what's behind the fact that most of us actually avoid those spaces or don't think to look for community there, when many libraries host classes and events for people with shared interests.

Sep 17th
Reply

Thomas Franklin

COMPLETE UTTER SHIT

Sep 10th
Reply

Thomas Franklin

not even going to listen, insufferable I'm sure. everything is racist.

Sep 10th
Reply

Nance G.

I actually liked conspiracy month.. I just don't like Ana Marie Cox. Her pauses are so awkward and she speaks so slow.

Sep 7th
Reply (1)
Download from Google Play
Download from App Store